80 / /. . ., .,'* -t % ..::--- - . .>\-- :j , ::- . ,>.< :"': ::.... -- ;d; ..... ); . . ,,-:. ......:. \ .:::"-':: h ' + . ....".. ..;. ."V'. ",þ" -f ,i '-- " :........ow:::;-. .. *- < - -.,' : . - - '" , '*- !:. : ---- -J .....,} If' '. . þ f \:-- . ,- -of t.. ..^ 5':,. Imported classic. : rite she man's Knit made by hand one hundred percent wool styled and detail-. in the old world tradition by ritches of Georgetowne. Small, medium, large, :: extra large in V -neck, ...::turtle neck & crew neck styles. $19.95 ptease indJcate style øreference, add $1 to cover cost of handhng. and allow one week for del ivery. ':: f ..... ....:. "" a grid of hairlines for lneasuring po- sitions-printed on the glass, and every tÏ1ne the earth or the moon went by, Haise v\lould look to see if it was in the fIght spot. It never was; at each pass the lnoon seen1ed to be a bit higher and the earth a bit lower, and that lneant that the spacecraft w i:lS still wobbling. It seelned as if something was venting froln the spacecraft and thereby alter- ing its course. At this point, the only thing the LM was supposed to be vent- ing was a Sillall quantity of w..:lter used to cool its electronic instl Uillents, and this was not supposed to affect its po- SItIon. At three \Vednesday I1H>rning, Lousilla heard Lovell's vuice on the d . " G } . " L . i " ra 10. ee WìIZZ, ouslna S(lH, )- OU got up kind of early, didn't you?" Lovell replied that it was cold upstairs in the com111and 111odule-that the temperature was S0111ewhere Ül the forties. This was the first indication that the teI11perature in the Cn1111llànd lllodule had dropped to a point of real discoillfort for the astrona.uts. 'Their clothing, designed with thE- spacecl.1ft's norll1ally conditioned air in ll1Ind, was of d fli111s) 111aterial called Bcta cloth, dnd their sleeping bags were 111ere]y dlln sheets of fabric designed to keep thell1 froll1 floating around, and were, in fact, perforated for ventilation. It was suggested by the controllers that the astronauts put on their space suits, but they declined, on the ground that the suits would ll1ake thell1 too chunsy to hdndle the spacecraft efficiently. j\t ten-thirty on \lVednesday lllorn- jng, a yellow Clution light flashed in- ide the LM to indicate that the level of carbon dioxide in the spacecraft's atll10sphere had built up to the point whel e son1ething had to be done about it. Ordinarily, the air was continuously "scrubbed" by being drawn by fans through c.:tnisters of lithiulll-hydroxiJe pellets, which have an affinity for car- bon dioÀide, but the ntunber of LM c:lnisters w c1S 1ill1ited, and those in the cOll1ll1and ll10dule were not cOll1patihle with the LM hardware. The Crew Systell1s Engineers in Houston had been working on this problem for .1 couple of day s, c:lnd had (Olne up with a way of adapting the cOll1ll1and-lllodule canis- ters for uSe in the Ll\1, by providing an clirtigh t connection between a COll1- 111and-1110dule canister and the LM hardware. The engineers had found that they could make the airtight con- nection ou t of one of the pLl tic bags used for storing part of the astronauts' lnoon-walk garh and then the appara- tus could be sealed with tape. The pre- vious day , Vance Brand, one of the several CAPCOMs who spelled each Limited Edition í .\. Dauntless Ship's Wheel Clock Handsome hand-crafted ship's wheel wIth bell-shaped base in rich warm cherry wood. The clock is a precision timepiece, no need to wind or wire. Operates one full year on any standard 9-volt battery Roman numeral dial. Overall height, 1212". $165. r -- Mass. Residents add 3% tax (or if delivered in Mass) Shipping $2. : M :' 1247 Wi!ronsin Avenue, N.W. W.. ington, D.C. .. 17 x \Jti - -, f!:: :e- i { . v -- lllh '\. - <!' 1 SHREVE, CRUMP & LOW CO. ESTABLISHED 1800 330 BOYLSTON ST BOSTON, MASS. 02116, (617) 267-9100